[Boatanchors] Mic's / RED FLAG
Richard Knoppow
1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com
Tue Jul 19 16:51:27 EDT 2011
----- Original Message -----
From: <bcarling at cfl.rr.com>
To: "Richard Knoppow" <1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com>; "Rob
Atkinson" <ranchorobbo at gmail.com>;
<boatanchors at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Tuesday, July 19, 2011 12:42 PM
Subject: Re: [Boatanchors] Mic's / RED FLAG
> For maximum transfer of energy, the source impedance and
> the load impedance need to be identical.
> The worst situation is when you have a very high impedance
> microphone going into a 600 ohm transmitter input.
> So a 600 ohm microphone into a low impedance transmitter
> input is best for that situation, but for the high
> impedance situations most of them are around 50 k ohms.
> Older tube riggs may have an input impedance of around 125
> megohms also. I have never tried it, but I would imagine
> that a 50 k ohms microphone might work just fine in that
> situation.
>
Well, this is the main source of confusion. Microphones
are NOT power sources and _should not be matched_. That
reduces the voltage and increases the noise. Microphones,
other than some special cases as I will note below, are
_voltage_ sources and all, regardless of their nominal
impedance, are intended to work into essentially an open
circuit, or at leas many times the nominal impedance. The
impedance given is a average _source_ impedance. Now, some
types of elements look like resistors and have a constant
source impedance over their frequency range. Nearly all
non-directional moving coil microphones fall into this
category. Crystal and ceramic microphones look like
capacitors and any resistance in parallel with them acts
like a high pass filter. Capacitance in parallel with them,
like cable capacitance, becomes a low pass filter.
Some microphones have resonant elements, these are
mostly directional microphones, with the special exception
of Electro-Voice "Variable-D" microphones which have a
similar mechanism to non-directional mics. Nonetheless, they
work best into the highest impedance possible because the
voltage output is greatest there. Microphones with a
resonant mechanism do not have an impedance that is constant
with frequency. They are like loudspeakers which have a peak
in impedance value at the resonant frequency. However,
unlike a speaker they are not intended to have efficient
power transfer. In fact, if operated into a matched load the
low frequency response will be reduced.
The exceptions I mentioned are microphones that are not
passive. That includes carbon, condenser, and electret
types. The carbon microphone, once the most common of all
types because it was found in every telephone, is an
_amplifier_ and must work with an external source of power.
Nonetheless, the output of the microphone, usually taken
from the secondary of a transformer, should not be matched
because, again, the voltage will be reduced. Condenser and
electret microphones are also control elements. The electret
is similar to a condenser microphone but has a permanent
charge. The internal impedance is extremely high so its
operated into an active amplifier so that the external
circuits won't load it. A condenser mica requires an
external source of charging voltage and also needs an
isolating amplifier, in other respects the two are quite
similar. The requirements for terminating the active element
depends on its design. Many are designed to work into
conventional microphone amplifiers but, because they are
electronic circuits can be made so that they are pretty much
independent of the load impedance, although again, the
voltage out will be reduced as a matching impedance is
approached.
There is a great deal more to this story but its
certainly beyond this quick note. Microphones and
loudspeakers are very complex because they are triple
transducers. The microphone must translate acoustic power
into mechanical power and then into electrical power and the
loudspeaker the reverse. None of these steps is done
perfectly and all the parasitic resonances and other
imperfections of each stage is reflected into the others.
Furthermore calculating an equivalent circuit for the
purpose of predicting performance is made difficult because
the sign convention changes from acoustical to mechanical
and again from mechanical to electrical. This problem was
addressed by Harry Olson of RCA, in his book on Dynamical
Analogies, but was done more thoroughly by Frederick V,
Hunt of Harvard University. His approach is disused in his
book _Electroacoustics_ . Olson's book is available free on
line from: http://www.pmillett.com/ Hunt's book has been
re-issued by the Acoustical Society of America and is
available via Amazon.
--
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles
WB6KBL
dickburk at ix.netcom.com
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